Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 20 – Speaking to
this year’s Valdai conference, Vladimir Putin delivered a speech blaming the
West for all of Russia’s problems and indicating that he will take a hard line
in response, a speech that some commentators are already comparing to his
address to the Munich security conference in 2007 (ura.news/articles/1036272683).
But
there was one notable exception to the Kremlin leader’s comments: He “was not
aggressive or pessimistic concerning future Russian-American relations,” Petr
Akopov of Moscow’s Vzglyad newspaper says.
“More than that, he defended [US President Donald] Trump from attacks and
ridicule by experts” (vz.ru/politics/2017/10/19/891685.html).
The question, the Moscow journalist
says, is “Why?”
Most of Putin’s remarks in his
speech concerned the international situation as a whole, but he did sharply
criticize the United States for what he said was its “main error in relations
with post-Soviet Russia” – the US, he argued, “took our trust in it … for
weakness” rather than a desire for cooperation.
The Kremlin leader said that the
situation had deteriorated with the removal of the Russian flag from its closed
consulate, something that he suggested could hardly be imagined in Soviet
times, even though at least initially he Putin had not responded to American
moves against Russian diplomats at the end of 2016 to give time for Trump to “correct”
the situation.
In the discussion period following
his remarks, Putin was directly challenged by both Russian and American experts
with regard to Trump and his behavior.
And “it was clear,” Akpov says, “that the opinion of Russian and Western
experts does not correspond with Putin’s position.”
“Put in simplest terms,” the
journalist continues, “the experts intheir questions commented on how poor and
weak Trump is compared to the strong and good Putin,” a view the Kremlin leader
does not accept and demonstrated that he has not changed his view that the US
president wants to work with Russia.
“Trump doesn’t need any advice,”
Putin said. “In order to be elected even without experience of administrative
work requires having a definite talent to pass through the crucible of
elections; and he has done this. He won honestly.”
“In fact,” the Vzglyad journalist says, “there was nothing surprising in the fact
that Putin did not say anything bad about Trump and even defended him from the
not very wise or even negatively inclined experts.” That is “because Trump’s
position toward Russia in fact hasn’t changed. He now like a year ago is
inclined ‘to come to an understanding with Putin.’”
That the US president has not been
able to do so, Akopov says, is “his misfortune” brought about by the opposition
of the American political establishment “but not his fault. And in the Kremlin,
this is very well understood.” Putin himself told the Valdai audience that “Trump
simply isn’t being allowed to do what he wants.
“Now we are working with a president
whom the American people elected,” Putin said. But his unpredictability
[reflects] the very great resistance [to him] inside the country which
practically has not allowed him to achieve even one of his pre-election
platforms and plans.” Trump is not the source of his “unpredictability,” the
Kremlin leader continued.
According to Akopov, “one can
disagree with Trump, Putin said (having in mind the domestic American
situation), but one must not show a lack of respect” for what Trump wants to do
but can’t because of opposition to him in the US. Cooperation with the US is
possible when Trump can act on his own ideas.
“The last comment,” the Russian
journalist said, “concerns not Trump personally but the US as such. And in
relations with Donald Trump, soon will be made the next step: Three weeks from
now, Putin will meet with him in Danang, Vietnam, at the summit of the Asian-Pacific
Economic Cooperation summit.”
At this, their second meeting, “the
two presidents will have something to discuss, although the main thing which
agitates both is the issue of when at long last Donald Tuump will be able to
fully enter into the fulfillment of his presidential obligations” rather than
being held back by others.
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